Windows |
Visual C++ 10 (2010) - 32-bitDownload10.1 MB |
Visual C++ 10 (2010) - 64-bitDownload9.7 MB |
Visual C++ 11 (2012) - 32-bitDownload11.4 MB |
Visual C++ 11 (2012) - 64-bitDownload12.7 MB |
Visual C++ 12 (2013) - 32-bitDownload10.9 MB |
Visual C++ 12 (2013) - 64-bitDownload12.1 MB |
GCC 4.7.1 TDM (SJLJ) - 32-bitDownload9.3 MB |
GCC 4.7.1 TDM (SJLJ) - 64-bitDownload11.8 MB |
GCC 4.8.1 TDM (SJLJ) - 32-bitDownload9.2 MB |
GCC 4.8.1 TDM (SJLJ) - 64-bitDownload10.5 MB |
GCC 4.9.2 MinGW (DW2) - 32-bitDownload9.3 MB |
GCC 4.9.2 MinGW (SEH) - 64-bitDownload10.0 MB |
On Windows, choosing 32 or 64-bit libraries should be based on which platform you want to compile for, not which OS you have. Indeed, you can perfectly
compile and run a 32-bit program on a 64-bit Windows. So you'll most likely want to target 32-bit platforms, to have the largest possible audience.
Choose 64-bit packages only if you have good reasons.
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